This chapter deals with the temporal deployment of multiple multimodal resources mobilized by the participants in social interaction, focussing on the emergent temporality of turns and actions. More precisely, it analyzes the participants'...
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This chapter deals with the temporal deployment of multiple multimodal resources mobilized by the participants in social interaction, focussing on the emergent temporality of turns and actions. More precisely, it analyzes the participants' mobilization of multimodal resources for achieving unit completions, showing how embodied completion is visibly achieved in an emergent way, how it is possibly revised by speakers and their co-participants as interaction unfolds in time, how embodied resources are integrated and embedded with language in a timely fashion. By so doing, the chapter reveals
Temporality in Interaction; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Introduction: Temporality in interaction; 1. The need for a temporal understanding of linguistic structures ; 2. The temporal constitution of experience and action ; 3. Retrospection and projection ; 4. Sequentiality and simultaneity ; 5. Multimodal temporalities ; 6. Temporally produced units and their malleabilities ; 7. Granularities of temporality ; 8. The papers in this volume ; References ; I. Mechanisms of temporality in interaction; The temporality of language in interaction: projection and latency
1. Introduction 2. Evidence of syntactic projection in interaction: co-constructions ; 3. Structural latency and online syntax ; 4. Further reflections on the grammar of projections in spontaneous language; 5. Some concluding remarks ; References ; Retrospection and understanding in interaction; 1. Retrospection in interaction ; 2. Respecification of understanding as a temporal, interactional phenom-enon ; 2.1 Traditions of theorizing 'understanding'; 2.2 Distinctive properties of face-to-face interaction and their consequences
2.3 Understanding in talk-in-interaction as an empirical phenomenon3. Interactional organization of retrospective understanding; 3.1 Displaying understanding in second position: Understanding; 3.2 Displaying understanding in third position: Intersubjectivity; 3.3 Displaying understanding in fourth position: Restoring intersubjec-tivity; 3.4 Displaying understanding of non-adjacent actions; 4. Conclusion; References ; Ephemeral Grammar: at the far end of emergence; 1. Introduction ; 2. Sedimented forms and interactional practices ; 2.1 Forms and practices
2.2 Conversation Analysis and Emergent Grammar 3. Data and analysis ; 3.1 Stephie's extended comment ; 3.2 Projecting an extended turn and initially securing displayed recipiency ; 3.3 I-initiation and self-repair as a locally emerging form ; 3.4 The upshot: Getting to a completed I-initiated utterance ; 4. Ephemeral form ; 5. Conclusion ; References ; II. Temporally-structured constructions; Temporality and the emergence of a construction: A discourse approach to sluicing; 1. Introduction: Temporality in the study of language ; 2. Sluicing ; 3. Theoretical considerations
4. Other discourse contexts of sluices5. Open and closed sluices; 6. A temporally situated construction; 7. Conclusion; References ; Temporality and syntactic structure: Utterance-final intensifiers in spo-ken German; 1. Introduction: Grammar and Interactional Linguistics ; 2. Utterance-final intensi-fying particles as a temporally organized and interactional phenomenon ; 2.1 Prepositioned intensifying particles as a standard pattern of German ; 2.2 Freestanding intensifying particles as second assessments
2.3 Post-positioned intensifying particles by single speakers as a method of upgrading an assessment